First Sister
Alexandra Delaine
| Age | 20 |
| Species | Human |
| Gender | Female |
| Height | 5.6 ft |
| Weight | 65 kg |
| Force Sensitive | Yes. |
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Alexandra Delaine stood at a modest 5.6 feet and weighed roughly sixty-five kilograms, her build lean and athletic rather than imposing. What she lacked in stature she compensated for with presence. Draped in the severe black uniform and flowing cape of an Imperial Inquisitor, she seemed less like a person and more like a shadow given form. Her face was concealed behind a smooth, expressionless helmet whose dark visor reflected only the crimson glow of her ignited lightsaber. The weapon's scarlet blade cast harsh red light across her silhouette, illuminating polished armor panels, black gloves, and the sharp lines of her uniform while leaving much of her figure obscured beneath layers of darkness. Every element of her appearance appeared intentionally stripped of individuality, transforming her into an instrument of authority rather than a recognizable woman.
When she moved, there was a measured precision to her actions, the sort born from relentless discipline and years of training. Her posture was perfectly upright, shoulders squared, head held high, and every gesture economical and deliberate. The long cape hanging from her shoulders amplified her presence, swallowing her smaller frame and lending her an almost predatory silhouette. Combined with the faceless helmet and crimson blade held motionless before her, Alexandra projected an unsettling calm that many found more intimidating than open aggression.
INVENTORY
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PERSONALITY AND BELIEFS
Alexandra Delaine is calm, disciplined, and deeply unsettling to be around. At only twenty years old, she lacks the decades of experience carried by many Imperial officials, yet she compensates through an unnerving level of composure and self-control. She rarely raises her voice, almost never loses her temper, and carries herself with the quiet confidence of someone who has long since accepted the horrors of her profession. To those who do not know her, she often appears mature beyond her years. To those who do, it quickly becomes apparent that something inside her is profoundly damaged.
Years ago, Alexandra was taken apart and rebuilt by the Dark Side Elite. Every weakness was exposed, every vulnerability exploited, every attachment severed until only obedience and purpose remained. Unlike many who survive such treatment, she never came to resent it. Instead, she embraced it. The process taught her a lesson she now carries into every aspect of her life: people are malleable. Given enough pressure, fear, pain, isolation, or temptation, anyone can be reshaped into something new. She views this not as cruelty but as reality.
Alexandra genuinely enjoys breaking people down, finding their weaknesses, dismantling their convictions, and rebuilding them into something she considers stronger. She derives satisfaction from watching certainty become doubt, independence become dependence, and resistance become obedience. More disturbingly, she often believes she is helping. The suffering is not the objective—it is simply the necessary mechanism by which transformation occurs. In her mind, she is offering others the same gift she was given.
She is fundamentally incapable of genuine attachment. Friendship, romance, family, loyalty—these are concepts she understands intellectually but cannot truly experience. People enter her life as subjects to be studied, manipulated, improved, or utilized. She may develop preferences, professional respect, or even possessiveness, but never healthy emotional bonds. The closest Alexandra comes to affection is investing time and effort into someone she finds interesting enough to reshape.
She views most individuals as unfinished products, limited by comfort, fear, attachment, and self-delusion. Left alone, they remain weak. Only adversity reveals who they truly are and what they are capable of becoming. The Dark Side Elite proved this to her. The terrified girl who entered its halls was destroyed, and something far more useful emerged in her place. Alexandra sees no tragedy in that transformation. Only success.
This philosophy extends to her view of the Force. Unlike Jedi who seek harmony or Sith who seek personal power, Alexandra sees the Force as another instrument through which weakness can be exposed and refined. Force-sensitives are particularly dangerous because they often mistake power for superiority. They become convinced they are special, chosen, or destined. The role of the Inquisitorius is to strip away those illusions. A Force user should not become a prophet or a tyrant. They should become a weapon.
Her loyalty to the Empire stems from a similar logic. The Empire is valuable because it creates order, and order creates the conditions necessary for civilization to survive. She has little interest in ideology, patriotism, or nationalism. If the Empire ceased to function, she would not defend it out of sentiment. She would defend it because the alternative is chaos, and chaos produces nothing except waste.
Perhaps most disturbing is that Alexandra does not consider herself evil.
In her mind, she is merely honest about the nature of growth. Everyone is shaped by suffering eventually. The only difference is that she chooses to accelerate the process. Where others see cruelty, she sees refinement. Where others see trauma, she sees transformation.
The fact that she enjoys it is simply a bonus.
This philosophy extends to her view of the Force. Unlike Jedi who seek harmony or Sith who seek personal power, Alexandra sees the Force as another instrument through which weakness can be exposed and refined. Force-sensitives are particularly dangerous because they often mistake power for superiority. They become convinced they are special, chosen, or destined. The role of the Inquisitorius is to strip away those illusions. A Force user should not become a prophet or a tyrant. They should become a weapon.
Her loyalty to the Empire stems from a similar logic. The Empire is valuable because it creates order, and order creates the conditions necessary for civilization to survive. She has little interest in ideology, patriotism, or nationalism. If the Empire ceased to function, she would not defend it out of sentiment. She would defend it because the alternative is chaos, and chaos produces nothing except waste.
Perhaps most disturbing is that Alexandra does not consider herself evil.
In her mind, she is merely honest about the nature of growth. Everyone is shaped by suffering eventually. The only difference is that she chooses to accelerate the process. Where others see cruelty, she sees refinement. Where others see trauma, she sees transformation.
The fact that she enjoys it is simply a bonus.
STRENGTHS
Unshakable Discipline
Alexandra possesses extraordinary self-control for someone her age. Fear, pain, exhaustion, intimidation, and emotional pressure rarely affect her decision-making. She has spent years suppressing weakness within herself and can continue functioning in situations that would break many others. Once she commits to a course of action, she is incredibly difficult to deter.
Psychological Manipulator
Alexandra excels at understanding how people think, what they fear, and what motivates them. She is highly skilled at interrogations, recruitment, coercion, and psychological warfare. Rather than defeating opponents physically, she often prefers to dismantle them mentally, turning their own insecurities and desires against them.
Patient Predator
Unlike many Force users who rely on aggression or overwhelming power, Alexandra is willing to spend weeks, months, or even years cultivating a target. She is comfortable playing long games, building trust, exploiting vulnerabilities, and slowly maneuvering people into positions where they can no longer escape her influence.
Absolute Loyalty to Duty
Her lack of personal attachments makes her remarkably reliable in Imperial service. Alexandra cannot be easily manipulated through threats against loved ones, emotional appeals, or divided loyalties. She consistently places mission objectives and institutional goals above personal concerns.
WEAKNESSES
Emotionally Hollow
Alexandra is fundamentally incapable of forming healthy emotional attachments. While this protects her from many vulnerabilities, it also isolates her from others. She struggles to understand genuine affection, friendship, or selfless loyalty, often misinterpreting them as weaknesses or forms of manipulation. This can cause her to underestimate people driven by love, compassion, or conviction.
Sadistic Compulsions
Alexandra genuinely enjoys breaking people down and reshaping them. While she disguises this as discipline, refinement, or necessity, the impulse is very real. This can lead her to prolong situations unnecessarily, take personal interest in certain individuals, or become distracted by opportunities to manipulate someone when a more direct solution would be wiser.
Projects Instead of People
She has a dangerous tendency to view individuals as unfinished works rather than autonomous beings. When she becomes interested in someone, she often attempts to "improve" them according to her own standards. This behavior frequently creates enemies, destroys potential alliances, and blinds her to the possibility that others may not want to be changed.
Youth and Inexperience
Despite her intelligence and training, Alexandra is still only twenty years old. She lacks the decades of practical experience possessed by many senior Imperial officers, politicians, and Force users. Her confidence sometimes masks gaps in judgment, particularly when dealing with situations she has never personally encountered.
HISTORY
Alexandra Delaine was born during the dying years of the Galactic Alliance, a child of a galaxy already beginning to crack beneath the weight of endless war. She never knew peace. By the time she was old enough to understand politics, entire sectors were burning, governments were failing, and Force users seemed determined to drag civilization from one catastrophe into the next. Like many children of her generation, she learned early that survival belonged to the ruthless, the disciplined, and the fortunate.
Her Force sensitivity was discovered at a young age, though not by the Jedi.
While the Galactic Empire was consolidating power following the collapse of the Alliance, a secret program was developing beneath the notice of most Imperial authorities. Hidden within the labyrinth of military intelligence, black budget facilities, and classified research programs, a small collection of Dark Side veterans had begun identifying, abducting, recruiting, and conditioning Force-sensitive individuals for a singular purpose. They had witnessed firsthand the destruction caused by Jedi and Sith alike and believed that traditional Force traditions were fundamentally flawed. Their answer was simple: create something new.
Children, war orphans, captured Sith acolytes, rogue Force users, and promising recruits disappeared into the program. Many did not survive, but Alexandra did. What followed was not training in any conventional sense. It was systematic destruction. Individuality was dismantled. Weaknesses were identified and exploited. Attachments were severed. Failures were punished. Successes were rewarded. Every lesson revolved around a single principle: power existed to serve authority, not the individual. The Force was not a spiritual gift, nor a path to enlightenment. It was a weapon, a dangerous one.
Years later, Alexandra would struggle to remember where the conditioning ended and her own personality began.
Unlike many candidates, she excelled. Not because she was the strongest or most gifted, but because she embraced the process. While others fought to preserve pieces of themselves, Alexandra became fascinated by transformation itself. She learned how fear altered behavior. How pain reshaped priorities. How isolation broke convictions. The same methods used against her became tools she would later wield against others. Her instructors saw promise where others saw damage. By the age of twenty, she had become one of the program's most capable operatives.
Then the Empire collapsed.
The Galactic Empire's rise had been swift. Its fall was swifter still. Beset by enemies on every side, the Imperial war machine began to fracture. Fleets were destroyed. Territories were abandoned. Communications collapsed. Entire commands vanished into the chaos. The secret program that had sheltered Alexandra suddenly found itself without support, protection, or purpose. Many of its handlers died. Others disappeared.
Faced with extinction, a small contingent of survivors attached themselves to the retreating forces of the 9th Mechanized Corps.
It was during the long withdrawal toward the Outer Rim and beyond that Alexandra first encountered Cerein Aron and the other future architects of what would become the Imperial Reclamation Authority. The Force users accompanying the Ninth were an oddity—dangerous, useful, and politically inconvenient. They were neither Jedi nor Sith. They belonged nowhere. For a time, they existed simply as another classified detachment.
That changed after Quintus. The campaign had demonstrated both their usefulness and the dangers posed by uncontrolled Force-sensitive elements operating throughout the collapsing frontier. Seeking a permanent solution, the leadership of the Ninth formally recognized the surviving members of the program as a distinct organization. The name chosen was simple.
The Inquisitorius.
For the first time, Alexandra and her fellow survivors possessed an identity beyond a forgotten black project. No longer hidden assets serving dead masters, they became the foundation of a new institution within the growing Imperial Reclamation Authority.
Today, Alexandra serves as one of the youngest members of the emerging Inquisitorius. To most within the Authority she appears disciplined, loyal, and frighteningly competent. Few know the truth of where she came from, fewer still understand what was done to create her, and almost nobody realizes that the methods once used to shape Alexandra are the same methods she now eagerly employs upon others.
After all, she is a firm believer in passing on good lessons.